4.5 Article

Perspective for soft robotics: the field's past and future

Journal

BIOINSPIRATION & BIOMIMETICS
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-3190/acbb48

Keywords

soft robotic; biomimetic; perspectives; future challenges

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Since the 1960s, soft robotics has been steadily growing, and recent innovations in rapid prototyping and flexible materials have enabled the development of fully flexible and untethered soft robotic systems. The integration of novel sensors and manufacturing processes shows promise for the future of soft robotics, with a focus on manufacturing techniques and tactile sensors for better interaction with the environment. The article highlights the potential of embodied intelligence in soft robots for autonomous computation from sensory inputs.
Since its beginnings in the 1960s, soft robotics has been a steadily growing field that has enjoyed recent growth with the advent of rapid prototyping and the provision of new flexible materials. These two innovations have enabled the development of fully flexible and untethered soft robotic systems. The integration of novel sensors enabled by new manufacturing processes and materials shows promise for enabling the production of soft systems with 'embodied intelligence'. Here, four experts present their perspectives for the future of the field of soft robotics based on these past innovations. Their focus is on finding answers to the questions of: how to manufacture soft robots, and on how soft robots can sense, move, and think. We highlight industrial production techniques, which are unused to date for manufacturing soft robots. They discuss how novel tactile sensors for soft robots could be created to enable better interaction of the soft robot with the environment. In conclusion this article highlights how embodied intelligence in soft robots could be used to make soft robots think and to make systems that can compute, autonomously, from sensory inputs.

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